* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download We`re All in this Together
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
SECTION 5 We’re All in this Together Marine Interdependence A lmost all living things are closely interconnected. Species are linked through relationships based on food, the need for protection, or to meet other requirements for survival. Like a web, what happens in one strand can have an effect on other parts of the system. Remove any one species, and there could be serious repercussions. Activities in this section involve games to learn about partnerships, food chains, and food webs in the marine environment. 1 Friend or Anemone? Students discover how species depend on each other to increase their chances for survival on coral reefs. Learning Objectives • Understand symbiotic relationships on a Caribbean coral reef • Explain relationships among organisms and their physical environment • Be able to present information learned to the class Grades 5–6 Subjects Science, Language Arts, Social Studies Skills analysing (questioning, discussing), applying (planning, creating), presenting (describing, public speaking, acting), citizenship (working in a group) Vocabulary algae, commensalism, invertebrate, mutualism, parasite, parasitism, photosynthesis, polyp, symbiosis Time 70 minutes Materials For each student: “Symbiotic Shuffle” game card (pages 119 – 120), scissors, safety pin For each group: a copy of “Symbiotic Shuffle Partners” (page 121) 116 Treasures in the Sea n response to the almost constant danger and predation that are prevalent on the coral reef, many different species of plants and animals have developed ways in which they can cooperate with each other in order to increase their chances of survival. Symbiosis, which means “to live together,” refers to situations where two species live in close contact with each other and interact in various ways. These partnerships have developed on reefs over thousands and thousands of years and support the diverse life of the ocean. By developing patterns of cooperation with another organism, many marine plants and animals have improved their chances of survival. Symbiotic relationships can help organisms acquire the food, protection, cleaning, or mobility that they need. This activity focuses on mutualistic symbiosis, in which both partners benefit from the association. I Before You Begin Familiarise yourself with the organisms described in “Symbiotic Shuffle Game Cards” (pages 119 – 120) and “Symbiotic Shuffle Partners” (page 121). Photocopy and cut out the game cards so there is one card per student. (There are eight organisms in total, so there will be several of each.) Make one copy of “Symbiotic Shuffle Partners” and cut out the descriptions. 1 Friend or Anemone? What to Do 1 Introduce the concept of symbiosis. Give an example of a symbiotic relationship such as that of people and houseplants. People care for houseplants by providing the conditions they need to survive — temperature, light, water — and in return can enjoy the plants’ growth and beauty. Explain that many such relationships exist in the marine environment and students will be learning about some of them by playing the “Symbiotic Shuffle Game.” 2 Play the game. Give each student a game card and instruct them to cut out the picture of their animal, and pin it to their clothes. (If your class needs more of a challenge, students should conceal their cards.) Give students time to read the description of their organism carefully, and to think of “yes” or “no” questions they can ask to find their symbiotic partners. Then students can go around the room asking questions until they find their “match.” (Note: There will be several possibilities for matches since there is more than one of each organism.) For instance they can ask: Are you a plant? Are you an animal? Do you live in a hole? Once all the students have found their symbiotic partners, have them group together with the other organisms representing the same partnership. For example, all of the cleaner wrasses and groupers should be in one group. 3 Students learn about and present partnerships. Provide each group with the “Symbiotic Shuffle Partners” description corresponding to their partnership. Explain that their next task is to decide in their groups how to “teach” the class about their symbiotic partnership. They can use a short skit, creative writing, or illustrations. Give the students time to create and practise their presentations. For five-minute presentations, students should have at least 20 minutes to prepare. If you have more time, they may do more research on the partnerships and create longer presentations. Once students are ready, have them present their work. After each presentation, allow other students to ask questions and the group may make additional comments to help explain the relationship they demonstrated.You may need to fill in some missing details to help clarify. 4 Explain symbiotic relationships further. After the presentations, explain how symbiotic relationships like these are common in tropical waters around the world and that all of these partnerships can be found in the Caribbean region. Describe how these associations are examples of mutualism — a symbiotic relationship in which both organisms benefit.You can also explain that other types of symbiotic associations are called commensalism and parasitism (see box below). Ask students if they can think of any other symbiotic relationships. (These may be marine or terrestrial. For example: Bees make it possible for some flowers to get the pollen they need to reproduce. Conversely, flowers provide bees with nectar to eat.) You Scratch My Back… or Else! Besides mutualism, two other types of symbiotic relationships are commensalism and parasitism. Commensalism is a type of symbiosis where one organism benefits and the other is unaffected. One example is the 2.5 cm (1 in.)-long conch fish, Astraopogon stellatus, which hides from predators in the shell of a queen conch during the day and comes out at night to feed. The queen conch apparently does not mind the presence of the tiny fish. Parasitism is another type of symbiotic association; in this case, one species benefits but causes harm to the other. In the same way that a fungus can eventually bring down a mighty tree, a boring sponge that digs into the hard structure of a coral to find refuge can gradually weaken and kill the coral. Countless symbiotic associations such as these occur in the oceans and play important roles in the complexity and diversity of life. Treasures in the Sea 117 Marine Interdependence Assessment Extensions Assess student presentations by creating a rubric based on questions such as: • Is the presentation well organised and logical? Is the arrangement of information clear? • Does the group efficiently describe each species? • How clear are the descriptions of the symbiotic relationship? • Did the group add enough information? Is there anything important missing? You may want to include any elements from language arts that your students are learning in class. Share the rubric with your students before they present, so they know on what basis they will be evaluated. • Have students research symbiotic relationships in familiar species and write a report on their research. They can also compare and contrast mutualism with other symbiotic relationships such as commensalism and parasitism. • Have students choose one of the symbiotic relationships from the game and make a comic strip about a typical day in the life of these organisms. Encourage students to have fun, exaggerating characteristics for effect, making the scenes very active and exciting, and so on. • Ask students if they can think of any symbiotic relationships that exist in their communities, schools, or families. (For example: People provide food and care to dogs, which in turn give protection and companionship.) Discuss this in class or ask students to write an essay as homework. hermit crab Adapted with permission from Shedd Aquarium.“Friend or Anemone,” an activity in Coral Reefs: Activity Guide for Grades 3 – 5 © 2000, published by Shedd Aquarium Society. 118 Treasures in the Sea Symbiotic Shuffle Game Cards I am a small fish who loves to eat the tiny parasites that drive big fish crazy. Normally, big fish would like to eat me for a snack, but when I work at the cleaning station they leave me alone. I am a large fish and fierce hunter, but there is one little fish that I will never eat. This little friend does me the favour of picking parasites off of me and cleaning between my teeth. I am a small invertebrate and I can barely see, so I need to get help from a friend for protection. That’s why I invite a small fish friend to live with me. This fish helps me by patrolling the neighbourhood and letting me know if there is any danger nearby. I share a hole built by a friendly animal and in exchange I act like a “seeing-eye fish.” My friend is almost blind, so I keep an eye on danger and will sound the alarm if there are any threats to our safety. Treasures in the Sea 119 Symbiotic Shuffle Game Cards 120 We are tiny single-celled plants that live within the skin of an animal. Because we are plants, we need to live in a sunny spot to grow so we can supply our host with food that will provide the energy it needs to build us a safe home. I look like a plant, but I am actually an animal that likes to live in warm, clear water where the sun is always shining. I enjoy the companionship of a partner that can produce energy to help me build a solid home. I have a tough shell around me, but not hard enough to protect me against some animals with strong beaks, like the octopus. My defense against these harmful killers is to let another animal with stinging tentacles hang onto me. I am a plant-like animal with a stinging attitude. Since I can’t move on my own, I look for free rides to other neighbourhoods where I can search for food. The threat of my sting keeps unwanted company away. Treasures in the Sea Symbiotic Shuffle Partners & Cleaner Wrasse and Grouper & Goby and Snapping Shrimp & Zooxanthellae (zo-zan-THELL-ee) and Coral & Hermit Crab and Sea Anemone Cleaning stations on the reef can look like a Saturday morning at the local car wash. Groupers and other big fish wait patiently in line while tiny cleaner wrasses groom them one by one. These brightly coloured wrasses advertise their occupation by twisting their bodies and waving their fins. Even though they are usually fierce predators, groupers never attack the cleaners. They let the tiny fish pick parasites from their bodies and even let them safely enter into their mouths to clean their teeth. If there is a threat while a wrasse is in the grouper’s mouth, the grouper closes its mouth and swims away but leaves a small opening to allow the wrasse to escape.Without cleaners, groupers could get sick or even die from the parasites and debris caught in their bodies.Without groupers and other large fish, the wrasse would lose a steady food supply. Because of its poor eyesight, the shrimp happily shares its burrow with the goby, which acts as its home alarm system. Perched in front of the burrow, the goby hunts for passing prey. The shrimp spends most of its time digging and cleaning out its burrow or looking for food near the entrance.When there is any sign of danger, the goby will sound the alarm by flicking its tail, and both the nearly blind shrimp and the goby retreat to the safety of the burrow. In exchange for the goby’s services, the shrimp shares its protective burrow and keeps it clean for the goby. Zooxanthellae are tiny single-celled plants (or algae) that live inside the tissue of a coral polyp (an individual coral animal whose form resembles an inverted jellyfish). These plants, like all plants, carry out photosynthesis, using sunlight to convert carbon dioxide and water into food and oxygen, which the coral uses to grow and build a hard, limestone cup under its body.Without the nutrients the algae provides, corals could not build reefs. Housed within the coral polyp, the algae have a protected environment and receive food from the waste nutrients (nitrogen and carbon dioxide) the polyp generates. In this way, each species benefits from the other — the coral gains a food source, and algae receive nutrients and inhabit a sunny and safe home. Some species of hermit crabs (crabs that live in the empty shells of other mollusks, such as the queen conch) frequently have sea anemones attached to their shells. These crabs will put up with the additional weight because many predators, especially the octopus, will avoid the poisonous sting of the anemone’s tentacles. The sea anemone can move by itself from one spot to another on its suction-cup foot, but this is a very slow process. In return for protecting its host, an anemone gets a free and faster ride around the reef on the back of a crab, and may even get scraps of food left over from the crab’s meals. Treasures in the Sea 121 2 What EatsWhat By exploring food chains and food webs that include important marine species in The Bahamas, students learn about the interdependence among species. Learning Objectives • Name marine species that are herbivores, carnivores, and omnivores • Describe food chains and food webs • Demonstrate and explain the interdependence of species Grades 4–6 Subjects Science, Language Arts, Social Studies Skills analysing (identifying components and relationships among components, questioning, discussing), interpreting (inferring, drawing conclusions, defining problems, identifying cause and effect), citizenship (working in a group) Vocabulary carnivore, consumer, decomposer, food chain, food web, herbivore, omnivore, predator, prey, producer Time 11/2 hours Materials yarn, cards (with pins or tape) or stickers with species names and illustrations 122 Treasures in the Sea arine plants and animals are part of an incredibly complex system that has evolved over millions of years. Each of the many and diverse living things in this system has an important role to play. For example, without grazing fish, such as the parrotfish, algae could grow out of control and deprive corals of light and oxygen. M A food chain shows how each living thing gets its food (or energy). For example, a simple food chain links algae, the sea urchin that eats them, the crawfish (that eats the sea urchin), and the shark (that eats the crawfish). • Plants are called producers because they are able to use energy from the sun to produce their own energy (sugar) from carbon dioxide and water. • Animals cannot produce their own food so they eat plants or other animals. They are consumers. • Animals that eat only plants are called herbivores. • Animals that eat other animals are called carnivores. • Animals that eat both plants and animals are called omnivores. • Decomposers (fungi and bacteria) feed on decaying matter. Most animals are part of more than one food chain and eat more than one kind of organism to meet their energy requirements. These interconnected food chains form a food web. In this activity, students will identify herbivores, carnivores, and omnivores and connect them in predator and prey relationships to create a food web. 2 What Eats What Before You Begin Producers, Consumers, and Decomposers — Let’s Recycle! In most ecosystems, plants are the primary producers. They generate energy through photosynthesis. (In the deep sea, where there is no sunlight for photosynthesis, bacteria make their own food from chemicals escaping the Earth’s crust in a process called chemosynthesis. They form the primary producers in these food chains.) The energy from plants then fuels the rest of the food chain. Herbivorous consumers, who cannot synthesise food themselves, eat plants and in turn are eaten by carnivorous consumers. After a producer or consumer dies, decomposer organisms such as fungi and bacteria break down their nutrients and return them as fertilisers to primary producers.Without decomposers, nutrients would remain locked up within the dead organisms. Make cards for all the species in “Food Web Connections” (page 126), writing the name and including an illustration, if possible. Include the sun and the decomposers.You may wish to add species students are familiar with and laminate the cards for durability. What to Do 1 Create food chains. Give each student a species card. Form a food chain, like the one illustrated below, having those students with the algae, sea urchin, crawfish, and shark cards line up. Talk about how these species are connected (when the sea urchin eats the algae it receives energy and so on up the chain). Can students identify the producer? (algae) Consumers? (The sea urchin, crawfish, and shark are all consumers.) Are there any herbivores in this food chain? (the sea urchin) Are there any carnivores? (the crawfish and shark) You can do this exercise again with other examples, such as: algae ➤ conch ➤ loggerhead sea turtle ➤ shark plankton ➤ shrimp ➤ Nassau grouper ➤ human sunlight producers consumers decomposers Treasures in the Sea 123 Marine Interdependence To reinforce understanding of the terms herbivore, carnivore, and omnivore, and to involve all the students, you can play a “What am I?” game. Ask students to think about what the species on their cards eat. Do they eat plants, animals, or both? Then say,“I eat only plants. What am I?” (a herbivore) All students with herbivore cards should go to a corner of the room that you indicate. Continue with “I eat only animals.What am I?” and “I eat both plants and animals.What am I?”When all students have selected their categories, have them discuss among their groups to see if they all agree. If they think a student should be in another category, that student can relocate. Then talk about the results as a class. There may be some species that students are unsure about and can research afterwards. 2 Play a Food Chain Game. Once students understand the components of a food chain, explain that they are going to play a game in which they form a food web. Because most animals eat, or are eaten by, more than one thing they are usually part of more than one food chain. These connecting food chains form a food web. Have students pin or tape species cards to their clothing. Find a place to play where students can spread out in a circle, but are close enough to be able to toss the ball of yarn to each other. The name of the game is “What Eats What,” so start with one of the largest species (human or shark). This player then has to “catch” one of its most likely food sources by holding on to the end of the yarn and tossing the ball to his or her prey.You can use “Food Web Connections” as a guide (note that the arrows indicate the direction of energy flow, from producer to consumer or from prey to predator). For example, a shark might catch the crawfish, so the “shark” tosses the ball of yarn to the “crawfish.” The crawfish then has to “catch” a squirrel fish or a sea urchin, while staying linked to the shark. Each student holds onto the yarn as s/he throws the ball, creating a connection to the next student in the food web. 124 Treasures in the Sea When a player tosses the yarn, s/he can state that s/he is a predator of the one receiving the yarn. The receiving player can say that s/he is the prey of that animal, but in turn is the predator of another animal who is the next to be connected. If the player is a marine plant s/he can state that s/he is a producer. Once the yarn has reached the students holding the producer organisms, have them connect to the “sun.” If there are any students who are not yet connected, discuss where they could join the web until the whole class is connected. (A juvenile grouper is included in “Food Web Connections,” but you can also consider larval and juvenile forms of other animals if it helps to add them into the web. For example, crawfish and young green turtles could eat juvenile conch.) There are many ways that this web could be formed, but this is an example that illustrates the interdependence of living things in the ocean. 3 Illustrate what happens when links are broken. Many things can happen to disrupt the connections in a marine food web.With students still linked in a web, introduce scenario 1: Overfishing is a common problem in the Caribbean — grouper, conch, and crawfish are heavily fished in The Bahamas.What would happen if all of these animals were gone? Students wearing the grouper, conch, and crawfish cards let go of the yarn and sit down. Discuss the “chain reaction” that could result.What would happen to the predators of these animals? (They would have to substitute other prey, move elsewhere, or if neither of these are possible, they may not get enough to eat.) What about their prey? (The prey population could increase to a point where it negatively affects other links in the web. For example, if there aren’t sufficient organisms feeding on algae, algae can overwhelm the coral reef, preventing the zooxanthellae in the coral polyps from photosynthesising.) 2 What Eats What Assessment Continue with scenario 2: A resort with a golf course, roads, and houses is built right on the shore.Trees and plants are removed so that when heavy rains come, mud and sand are washed into the water, covering seagrass meadows and blocking the sun from the turtle grass. How would the loss of the turtle grass impact the food web? Students wearing producer cards release the yarn and sit down. Discuss the consequences. Encourage students to think about the interdependence of species. Is turtle grass important to the survival of sharks? Do sharks eat turtle grass? (Sharks don’t eat turtle grass, but they eat sea turtles that eat seagrass.) 4 What is our role in the web? The game illustrated that each species has an important role to play in the food web.What happens if we take too many grouper, conch, and crawfish? (We may not find some of our favourite dishes to eat.The disappearance of these species would be a huge social and cultural loss to Bahamians, and it would also impact our economy. Loss of these species would also be an ecological loss — species that depend on conch, grouper, and crawfish for food would be affected, and populations of species that they eat may become disproportionately large.) What can we do to help keep the food web intact? (We need to obey regulations about closed seasons and minimum size and to reduce consumption of threatened or stressed species such as conch, grouper, and crawfish, especially during reproduction.) Have students write sentences answering the following questions: • What did you learn today about the relationships between species in food chains or webs? (They depend on each other for survival; energy passes from one species to another; every species has a function in its habitat, such as decomposing, consuming, producing.) • How is a food chain or web formed? (Organisms are linked according to what eats what. Food chains begin with microscopic organisms that are preyed upon or consumed, and usually end with an organism nothing else will prey upon, such as a large shark.A web is formed by connecting food chains.) • What are the components of a food chain or web? (producers, consumers, decomposers; or predators and prey) • Give an example of a herbivore, carnivore, and omnivore and something it eats. • Why should people care if food chains are broken? Use an example to explain your answer. (Whether it’s a direct loss of a food source, or an indirect loss — such as the disappearance of turtle grass and the resulting disappearance of animals that eat grass that are eaten by people — students should give examples that illustrate the importance of interconnections.) Extensions • Have students write a story or a comic strip from the perspective of a conch, grouper, or crawfish. What problems does it have finding food? How does it escape predators? • Have students write a dialogue between two species that illustrates the relationship between them and how their lives are interconnected. • Create a spelling list for the week based on the vocabulary used in the lesson such as: producer, consumer, decomposer, food chain, food web, herbivore, carnivore, omnivore. sand dollar Treasures in the Sea 125 Food Web Connections human dolphin shark Nassau grouper octopus crawfish loggerhead sea turtle sea urchin clam squirrel fish shrimp coral red snapper stingray parrotfish queen conch phytoplankton crab juvenile grouper green sea turtle PRODUCERS sea star turtle grass algae DECOMPOSERS (bacteria, fungi) 126 Treasures in the Sea C O N S U M E R S barracuda SUN